Jacksonville Mayoral Race Draws National Political Interest

There's a reason why the mayoral race in Jacksonville, Florida, is drawing the attention of outsiders like former President Bill Clinton, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Gov. Jeb Bush and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and it's about more than who wins on Tuesday.

It's because the state's largest city will also be a key to winning Florida in the 2016 presidential election, and having an ally in the mayor's office can only help.

Perry, Bush, and Rubio have an eye on the White House next year and each are helping former state Republican Party Chairman Lenny Curry, who's challenging incumbent Democrat Alvin Brown. Clinton, whose wife Hillary Rodham Clinton is running for president, came to Jacksonville to raise money for Brown.

"It just shows you the stakes that the state Republican Party believes are here," said Matthew Corrigan, a University of North Florida political science professor. "Rick Perry and Marco Rubio and Jeb Bush — this is looking like a Republican operation not a Jacksonville mayor's race."

Florida is considered one of the most important pieces in winning the White House as the largest of swing states. While Miami is the state's largest metropolitan area, Jacksonville's mayor serves all of Duval County, which has about 900,000 residents. Duval County and has played a role in recent presidential elections. Without it, George W. Bush wouldn't have won in 2000, when he carried Florida by 537 votes and Duval County by 44,234 votes. He carried Duval in 2004 by 61,586 votes.

But President Barack Obama targeted Jacksonville in 2008 and 2012 with the goal of making a solidly Republican area more competitive. About 30 percent of the city is black, or roughly double the statewide average. Obama's campaign substantially increased black voter registration and turnout and cut the Republican margin of victory Bush saw here by tens of thousands of votes. John McCain won Duval by less than 8,000 in 2008 and Mitt Romney carried it by fewer than 15,000 in 2012. Obama carried the state.

One benefactor was Brown, who in 2011 became Jacksonville's first black mayor and first Democrat to win in 20 years. He's positioned himself as a conservative Democrat, saying he's willing to work with Republican Gov. Rick Scott to create jobs. His absence at an Obama 2012 campaign rally was noticed by the local media.

If Brown wins re-election, he'll be on a short list of Democrats seen as potential candidates for governor in 2018. Republicans want to stop that path while restoring Republican dominance to the region for 2016.

Perry has traveled to Jacksonville to help Curry, Bush has taped a video for him and Rubio is scheduled to appear at a rally Monday.

"In terms of what they see in 2016, I think Lenny has tried to make this a national issue. I focus on making this about Jacksonville. People in Jacksonville don't care what's happening in Washington, they care what's happening in Jacksonville," Brown said.

Curry wouldn't discuss the implication the race has on 2016, but he has no apologies for bringing in Republican heavy hitters.

"It's important for people in Jacksonville to know that I am a conservative Republican. I stand by conservative values — fiscally responsible government, free enterprise solutions," he said. "Asking for the support of those individuals was a statement to Jacksonville that this is who I am and I'm proud of it."

The race is considered too close to call and has been nasty. Curry, an accountant, is using a report that found more than $500 million in accounting errors to blame Brown for being fiscally irresponsible, though the report found the errors began long before Brown took office. Curry also blamed Brown for rising violent crime.

"We should all be angry, we should all be upset, we should all be mourning," Curry told a small group of business owners. "We had lost the distinction of the murder capital in the state of Florida. Our violent crime has now spiked over the last three years, the murder rate is now back up."

Brown says Curry is a hyper-partisan who won't govern in the best interests of all city residents. He's accused Curry of trying to suppress the black vote when he was the state GOP chairman, pointing at cuts in early voting days and other changes ahead of the 2012 presidential election that critics said made it more difficult for minorities to vote.

In flyers being hung on doorknobs, Brown's campaign calls Curry, "Divisive and dangerous." It led Curry to ask Brown during a televised debate, "Do you think I'm a racist?"

"He did everything he could to suppress our citizens' right to vote by taking away early voting. Why would he do that?" Brown said the next day. "He spent his entire adult life being divisive and dividing people instead of uniting them. I spent four years uniting this city."

Brown chose a bakery near downtown for an interview with The Associated Press to symbolize a city economy that's improving. When he took office, the area stood vacant. It now has stores, restaurants and new urban apartments.

"Downtown is on fire. It's thriving. It's doing well — more jobs, more opportunity," Brown said. "I'm the mayor who believes in opportunity for all. Period. No matter what side of town you live on. That's how I govern my city."

There's a reason why the mayoral race in Jacksonville, Florida, is drawing the attention of outsiders like former President Bill Clinton, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Gov. Jeb Bush and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and it's about more than who wins on Tuesday.